What might FMLA retaliation look like?
The federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) prohibits employers from retaliating against an employee or prospective employee for having exercised or attempted to exercise any FMLA right. Despite this law being in place for more than thirty years, employers can run afoul to its provisions.
What might FMLA retaliation look like?
Retaliation occurs when an employer (through a manager, supervisor, administrator, or directly) takes any adverse action (firing, demoting, etc.) against an employee for engaging in protected activity – like requesting or taking FMLA leave.
An adverse action is also an action which would dissuade a reasonable employee from raising a concern about a possible violation or engaging in other related protected activity. Retaliation can also have a negative impact on overall employee morale.
FMLA retaliation examples
FMLA retaliation can take many forms, and generally involves using an employee’s request for or use of FMLA leave as the basis for a negative factor in employment actions, such as hiring, promotion, or disciplinary actions.
Specific examples of retaliation include the following:
- Counting FMLA leave as an absence under company attendance policies;
- Disciplining or terminating an employee for asking for leave;
- Terminating an employee shortly after returning from leave;
- Denying a promotion to an employee who otherwise would have been promoted;
- Cutting an employee’s pay or benefits after the employee requests medical leave;
- Reinstating an employee to a lesser position at the end of leave;
- Changing an employee’s work location or shift after returning from leave;
- Firing or in any other way discriminating against someone, whether or not an employee, because that person has —
- Filed any charge, has introduced any proceeding under or related to the FMLA;
- Given, or is about to give, any information in connection with an inquiry or proceeding relating to any right under the FMLA; or
- Testified, or is about to testify, in any inquiry or proceeding relating to a right under the FMLA.
Case in point
Let’s say that Joe Employee took a few days of approved FMLA leave when his child was in the hospital overnight and recovering from surgery.
When he got back to work, he found out his company’s human resources office charged him with four attendance points for the days he missed work.
Under his employer’s attendance plan, he could be fired if he receives one more point for missing work.
This would be retaliation against Joe because he took FMLA leave. Because his leave was protected, he could file a claim against his employer, which could land the employer in court facing a slew of fines, penalties, and other damages, including damage to their business’ reputation.
Key to remember: The FMLA protects employees from retaliation taken because they asked for or took job-protected leave. Employees can file expensive retaliation claims against employers.